The company is one of a handful of players that can make the high-powered GPUs needed in much of artificial intelligence.
The strong future in its AI chip business quelled investor concern over lowering its revenue expectations for the fourth quarter of 2023.The chipmaker posted an earnings per share of 70 cents, adjusted, narrowly beating the LSEG, formerly Refinitiv, estimate of 68 cents per share. Revenue was also a slim beat, totaling $5.8 billion versus the $5.7 billion expected.
One comment seems to have excited Wall Street: AMD CEO Lisa Su said Tuesday evening that the company expects GPU revenue of about $400 million during the fourth quarter, and to top $2 billion in 2024.. Still, AMD is one of only a handful of companies capable of making high-powered graphics processing units that power AI models.
"Upcoming MI300 accelerator is guided to $400mn sales in Q4E and $2bn+ in CY24E, with healthy traction across hyperscalers, enterprises, OEMs, and AI startups," Bank of America analysts said in a note to investors. AMD said its new MI300A and MI300X GPUs are on track for volume production during the fourth quarter of this year.Analysts at Raymond James lowered their price target from $145 to $125 but kept AMD as a"strong buy" largely due to its AI business.
"We are lowering our estimates but continue to like the story due to long term AI/ML potential. AMD is off to a solid start, and we see no reason why the company can't capture 10–20% share of the $100B+ AI accelerator market longer term," the Raymond James analysts said.